Republicans furious about timing of Bayh’s retirement announcement

Republicans are livid about the timing of Sen. Evan Bayh’s
(D-Ind.) retirement announcement.

They have at least four candidates in the upcoming primary while the Indiana
Democratic Party will get to decide its nominee.

Indiana required nominating petitions to be filed by noon
Tuesday. Bayh announced Monday he would not seek reelection, giving would-be
candidates less than 24 hours to get on the ballot.

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Republicans have four candidates who made the deadline and a fifth whose signatures are being validated.
Democrats had no serious successor in position, given that Bayh had already his
filed his nominating petitions and had $13 million in bank.

Because no Democrat was able to gather the 4,500 nominating
signatures — 500 from each congressional district — the party’s executive
committee will meet in the next six weeks to decide on a nominee.

Cafe owner Tamyra d'Ippolito (D), who was preparing to
challenge Bayh in the primary, scrambled Tuesday to submit the required
signatures, but she failed to meet the benchmark, according to officials.

On the Republican side, Rep. Mike Pence (Ind.) and Indiana
Secretary of State Todd Rokita toyed with the idea of running but passed on the
race while Bayh was the expected nominee.

Former Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.), who made Tuesday’s deadline,
is considered the GOP favorite, but he has become an early Democratic target
and faced criticism for his lobbying-client list.

Republicans have called on Bayh to ask for an extension of
the filing deadline.

“The reality and ramifications of this timing cannot, and
should not, be ignored,” National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman John
Cornyn (Texas) said in a statement.

“Assuming there is no qualified candidate that files the
appropriate documentation before the deadline, Sen. Bayh should call on the
state Democratic Party to ask an Indiana court to extend the candidate filing
deadline — both for this Senate candidacy and for any House candidacy that is
left open by a Democrat House member who runs for the Senate nomination,”
Cornyn said. “Doing so would remove any appearance of unfair gamesmanship by
the Democrats while affirming their belief that voters, and not party bosses,
should be the final arbiters of elections.”

Bayh’s office referred all comments about a possible filing
extension to the Indiana Democratic Party, which did not comment by deadline.

“I take Evan at his word that he was wrestling with this
decision for a while,” he said. “These are very tough decisions to make.”

Democratic strategists said the lack of a primary, while
Republicans have a five-way battle raging, could be a boon.

“We won’t have a primary. They’ve got a primary, and they’ve
got Republicans already attacking Coats and Coats having to fire back,"
said Robin Winston, a Democratic strategist and former state party chairman.

Observers agreed that the Republicans don’t have a white
knight.

“Coats has a big name recognition problem,” said John Roos,
a professor at the University of Notre Dame. “The fact that he ran statewide so
long ago, he’s going to have to refresh that memory. He’s going to have to
spend a ton of money.”

John Livengood, former chairman of the Indiana Democratic
Party, said the Democratic nominee will have ample time to build campaign
infrastructure. “I don’t think that whoever’s picked will end up starting out
at a disadvantage,” he said.

Ellsworth, who got the news Monday while touring his
district, is open to the idea, aides said. He’s expected to hold a “family
discussion” in the next few days to decide how to proceed. “The next step will
be taking a few days to talk to my wife and to folks in Indiana about where I
can best serve our state,” he said in a statement Monday.

Ellsworth doesn’t have a serious opponent for his House
seat, but Hill could once again face ex-Rep. Mike Sodrel (R), which may
influence his decision to run.

Some Democrats have grumbled that Bayh’s late decision could
give GOPers a leg up in the race, but the senator dismissed that criticism
Tuesday.

"Those critics must not know my state very well,” Bayh
said on the CBS “Early Show.” “Hoosiers are very independent. There are five
Republicans running; they're going to have a vigorous primary. I don't know who
their nominee will be. And I am highly confident that we will have a candidate
for the United States Senate who will be very competitive and have an excellent
chance of winning this seat in November."